You know about my clash of exams ... Guess I will have to revise as much as possible in this month itself.
So I plan to complete that pace final lap (still a few chapters of maths and physics is remaining )
Also I plan to attempt the Chemistry GMP (not sure tbh)
Besides one thing which I have to do at any cost is completing the Arihant 39 years of all subjects. I have completed about 60-70% of it and have to complete it.
Note that all this I have to do along with daily revision of at least 2-3 chapters
Not to forget the question papers . Have to solve at least half a dozen more
So I guess this is it . I know this is kinda impossible feat to achieve given the the tight schedule !

Will revise and practice weak chapters for 1 week. After that 2 test per week till advanced on thur/sunday. With that i will solve question of rrb and gmp lets see how much i can complete dont have any goal till now.

In the first week after mains i had a schedule made up for strengthing advance only topics such as SOT,qualitative analysis,geometry of complex no.s and such chapters..
Along with these for organic i had planned to complete ms chauhan (i had completed half of it already)...and seeing the level of orgainc chem in jee 18 ...i think msc helped me alot(would advice u to solve it if u want to master organic chem)
For inorganic i had read NCERT almost 3-4 times.and i did questions from v k jaiswal.
Apart from this
I solved - Resonance Advance Dpps
And Revision materail provided by my institute(which had 3000 questions,though i was able to solve only 2000 )(must say this thing had some amazing questions... I m sure @Viraj and @pratyaksh_tyagi might remember these )

Apart from this my institute had scheduled a full length test every alternate day.and i also gave Allen online test series and Fiitjee Aits.
Last 4 days b4 advance ...i enjoyed them mostly..studing very little and focusing more on exam temprament

Was in a good mood and didnt do proper prep till the time Mains results were declared. Seriously, dont do that.

After results, I wanted to revise each chapter by solving problems pertaining to that chapter from various references. I got through 3 days and got damn bored. I stopped doing that and just started spamming JEE adv papers..

My schedule during the break between mains result and advanced was like this:

6:00: Wake up and review mistakes of previous paper and do detailed analysis of paper.
8:00: Breakfast and chill till 9:30
9:30 - 12:30 : Solve paper 1 of some advanced mock exam
12:30-12:45: Compute scores of paper 1 and think about how much better the paper would have been if I hadnt made silly mistakes
12:45 - 2:00 : Eat lunch and chill
2:00 - 5:00: Solve paper 2 of same advanced mock exam
5:00 - 5:15: Do the same thing as 12:30 - 12:45
5:15-7:30: Chill
7:30 - 8:00: Eat dinner
8:00 - 10:30: Review and analyze mistakes of todays paper. If there is spare time, solve problems from random reference book (Basically studied what I felt like, sometimes revised inorganic)
10:30 - 11:00 : Waste time on YT.
11:00: Sleep

As you can probably see, I didnt do ANY "study". It was more of a review and fix holes exercise for more than a month.

At this point, there is no use of studying something new and unknown. In fact, I had only a rudimentary idea about many (read few) chapters, and never made an attempt to read them during the time between mains and adv. I did that because I knew that it would be a very inefficient use of time.

I would definitely recommend everyone to solve as many papers as you can in the same timings as the actual exam. It makes you habituated to solving JEE level problems during the 9:30-12:30, 2-5 time slots. This helps a lot, especially if you get a bad test centre ( I got one with no A/C, fans not working, in the middle of a deserted area where temperatures were around 38 degrees in a humid city).

As the exam progresses, I'd recommend to solve easier papers. It boosts your confidence and makes you take the exam chill. I did the very same thing and reduced difficulty to such a low extent that I'd solve the exam in 80% of the duration of the exam while still getting a good score!

Note that the exams that I gave were not all at home. Some of them (maybe around 10) were at my coaching.

Overall, I'd say solve as many papers as you can. I solved more than 50 papers between mains and advanced (that's 50x2 = 100 3hr papers). Something that I did which helped me boost my confidence was to keep track of my scores in a spreadsheet, compute the average percentage and then compare to previous year stats of JEE adv marks vs ranks. Watching the line graph grow is something exciting and also a clear indicator of how your preparation was going. I actually did the excel thing for fun, but I guess it gave me reassurance that what I was doing was the right thing to do.

Well, I guess it shows that I didn't worry about the outcome of the exam more than my confidence level. I'm thinking that somewhere deep in my mind, I never pictured myself being in an IIT Plus, its purely natural that you'd feel tired and want to chill after 3 hours of intense, focused efforts .